bd 
May 21, 1915 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and’ ‘Remindet | 97 
—— 
ill-fated Lusitania, this being the port 
for which she was bound. Youghai, 
the home of Raleigh, was also a feast 
for the eyes, with its quaint architec- 
ture and ivy-covered walls. The 
various pictures of the mountains, 
valleys, rivers and lakes, showed that 
nature had deposited a great deal ot 
her beauty on this isle. The build- 
ings were very picturesque from the 
poor dwellers’ thatched hut to the 
modern buildings of the cities. Ire- 
land is bountiful in her ancient ruins 
of castles and monasteries. Although 
they are covered with ivy and vines 
the architecture is visible to some ex- 
tent. 
The lecture proved most interest- 
ing and was quite beneficial. 
. Rey. Mr. Bulkeley, former pastor 
of the Unitarian church of Beverly, 
will be the speaker at the next meet- 
j 
INCORPORATED 1869 
The New England Trust Company 
BOSTON, MASS. 
Capital $1,000,000 
Surplus and Profits over $3,000,000 
ACTS AS EXECUTOR, ADMINISTRATOR 
TRUSTEE, GUARDIAN, ATTORNEY OR AGENT 
Write for our Booklet: 
“THE MANAGEMENT OF TRUST PROPERTY’”’ 
Issues Letters of Credit and Travelers’ Cheques. 
The only safe way to carry money when travel- 
ing. Instantly available when needed in the 
United States and abroad. Consult us before 
ing of the Brotherhood. The usual starting on your next trip. 
collation was served at the close of 
the lecture. 
JAMES R. HOOPER, President 
' ARTHUR ADAMS, Vice-President | ALEXANDER COCHRANE, Vice-Pres. 
MANCHESTER GEORGE WIGGLESWORTH, V.-Pres) HENRY N. MARR, Secretary | 
a FREDERICK W. ALLEN, Treasurer FRANCIS R. JEWETT, Trust Officer 
Miss Mildred Foster has given up THOMAS E. EATON, Asst. Treasurer ORRIN C. HART, Asst. Trust Cfficer 
; ; EDWARD B. LADD, Asst. .H. r fan. Se . Vs 
. her work in Boston to accept a posi- Asst. Treasurer JAS.H.SAWYER, Man. Safe Dep. Vaults 
_ tion as book-keeper for Valentine & 
| Leach. 
3 Educator shoes at W.R.Bell’s. adv. THE OLDEST TRUST COMPANY IN BOSTON 
4 Mrs. Frank E. Smith of Salem 
was in town Monday to spend the 
day at the home of Mr. and Mrs. 
= Julius F. Rabatdy, Central st. gee ae 
Mrs. L. W. Floyd and: daughter Bt Ge ae Heid Ue 
ar eee : : : ANTI-SUFFRAGE NOTES. ect to gain by eirculating such false- 
_ Miss Abbie Floyd, returned from a 3 : re g ye gs 
: * a Ooas: 
_ trip of about a fortnight to Norfolk, Maes | ithe hy 
en a ioe To the Editor: Judging from their outcry, the 
— Va., and Washington last Saturday Ke Tae ice as yon ioe te Se 
? L. R. S: appears to have been de- Faneuil Hall meeting must have hit 
evening. 
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert N. West of 
Amesbury, were here for the week- 
end with their son-in-law and daugh- 
ter, Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Floyd, at 
their home on Central st. 
‘Boston trip Books for sale at F. 
ceived, like many other suffragists, 
by the report sent out from suftrage 
headquarters about the Faneuil Hall 
anti-suffrage-anti-socialist mass meet- 
ing. It was not written, as she says, 
by a Boston newspaper man, but by 
a paid suffrage worker, a publicity 
the suffragists pretty hard. L.R.5. 
says “there was not one representa- 
tive person among the speakers.” 
What does she mean by “a represen- 
tative person?” Mrs. George repre- 
sents 31,600 adult women of Massa- 
chusetts, all actively opposed to wo- 
~ W.'Bell’s Beach st. adv. ben Pete Ree . 
me hack who was refused employment man suffrage, and several hundred 
Wm. Cook was injured, but not ee ae Me ps s Ley 
by the anti-suffrage committee. The thousands adult women of Massachu- 
seriously, last Saturday morning 
when his motorcycle collided with an 
automobile at Danvers, driven hy 
Bro. John of St. John’s college. 
Lester E. Simms, who has been at 
the Gloucester office of the Western 
Union all'winter, is in charge of the 
Manchester office of the company 
again this summer. 
Last Saturday afternoon the play- 
ground team of young boys played a 
boys team from Essex, at baseball, 
and won 16 to 9g. This Saturday 
motning the team will play a Beverly 
oth grade team at Beverly Farms, 
and in the afternoon they will play 
Beverly Farms at Tuck’s Point. 
When you think of painting think 
real story of the Faneuil Hall meet- 
ing was told in the Sunday news- 
papers of Boston, not one of which 
has any anti-suffrage bias; and the 
anti-suffragists can easily afford to 
allow the matter to rest between 
those newspapers and the disappoint- 
ed suffrage worker whose report the 
suffragists are sending broadcast in 
the hope of deceiving the public. 
There is evidence, however, that 
this attempt at deception has not suc- 
ceeded as well as was hoped. Honest 
suffragists who were at the meeting, 
and others who read the reports in 
the Sunday newspapers, are indignant 
at the suffrage leaders for attempting 
to belittle it as they have. One suf- 
setts who do not want to vote, al- 
though taking no public part in the 
fight against suffrage. Mr. Matthews 
is a prominent member of the bar in 
Newark, N. J., who has served as a 
member of the New Jersey Legisla- 
ture. Mr. Galvin was for years city 
clerk of Boston and his name is a 
household word among all who are 
interested in work for the betterment 
of their city. If he is not a repre- 
sentative citizen, then no man in Bos- 
ton is. Mr. Sullivan served two terms 
in Congress, where he achieved 1 
national reputation for ability and in- 
tegrity, was for several years chair- 
man of the Boston Finance Commis- 
sion, and is now corporation counsel 
of Tappan, 17 Bridge st., Manches- fragist has written to the Cambridge of the city of Boston. In his work as 
ter. adv. Standard asking what suffragists ex- (Continued on next page.) 
